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WillTravel

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Posts posted by WillTravel

  1. There are two ways to try to get a good idea of what a hotel is.

    One is to look at the list of Hotwire hotels in Rome, which is included here:

    Hotwire Hotel List

    Looking at that list, you can see the list of amenities does match the Intercontinental.

    Another way is to set up a dummy Flight + Hotel package which matches your date range (with an extra day at the start to allow for the flight), and see what hotels show up. This is not foolproof, as the hotels listed for the vacation packages may or may not be the same as you get when doing a regular search. Doing this, you also see that the 5* Intercontinental comes up with the same amenities.

    It's hard to get a nice, well-located hotel for a cheap price in Rome, so I think this is a pretty good deal.

  2. I know it can be unpleasant to get an extra charge, but this is very standard for Europe. What I like about this hotel is that it has good air conditioning and is close to many metro lines, so although it may not be your best deal ever, you should be fine there.

    It sounds like the amount of the charge has still not been resolved. Looking at lemeridien.com, the hotel's cheapest website rate is 329 Euros during this time, but a room with two double beds is 374 Euros, so from that point of view you got a huge discount off the website rate. If you want to resolve this now, you could telephone the hotel and ask for the cost to be upgraded to a room with two double beds, or you could ask the cost of a rollaway. However, in the room we had, I'm not sure a rollaway would have fit. If you don't resolve it, take a sleeping bag or an air mattress for your child and hope for the best when you check in discreetly.

  3. I would definitely check to see what your best deal without HOTWIRE is. For Venice I have found HotelClub often has good deals, at least in the winter, but I would check HotelsCombined.com too.

    I notice tha the 4* Boscolo Bellinin on Expedia offers a double room with breakfast for an average price of $167 per night. However, this couldn't be the HOTWIRE hotel, as the Bellini has no restaurant on site. The point, though, is that maybe you can get a good deal for a known hotel outside Hotwire, and that might be your best bet for a 6-night stay.

  4. You can look at the list of winning Priceline hotels in Brussels to see what people have reported so far. The important thing is to look at the zone map for Brussels and decide if you would be happy with any 4* hotel that is in that zone. It's also possible you could get a hotel that has not been reported yet.

    What I would definitely do is book a cancellable backup hotel, if you aren't sure what you want to do, because any availability is quickly disappearing. If you are concerned about price, you probably can't be too picky about location, given the circumstances.

  5. That's a good bargain for the Ibis. These are basically like 2* hotels, but usually in good shape and modern, unlike some 2* hotels.

    For Vienna, I got a great deal at the 4* Lindner am Belvedere using www.ameropa.de . But the website is only in German, so I found it a bit tricky. I got vouchers for the hotel by postal mail. But I'd suggest looking at that website anyway.

    For Frankfurt, I think you can cancel a Starwood C&P room up until fairly late, right? So you still have a chance to bid if you want.

  6. Just to be safe, I'd take a look at a site like www.hrs.de and book some cancellable backups. German hotel prices are generally quite reasonable if there are no huge events (and I don't think you are actually intersecting any big events, but just coming close).

    I'd also take a look at some other sites, like www.hotelscombined.com and see what prices you can get without Priceline, although the cheapest ones there will probably be prepaid.

    Actually my main concern would probably be Paris in September, so that's where I'd be especially sure to make a backup. I don't think you'll find any 2-3* in the Latin Quarter that's particularly cheap - prices have gotten quite high, and September is generally the most expensive month. I'd expect 100 Euros per night as a bare minimum with those criteria, and probably more.

  7. This is going to depend on your expectations for a hotel, whether you should get a 3*, 4*, or 5*. Of course your budget is important too.

    Note that if you have in mind a "true" luxury hotel like the Dorchester, none of these will be satisfactory, but definitely not a 3* or 4*. How good a hotel do you want? If you aren't used to budget accommodations, then you probably should get at least a 4* hotel. If you read some of the reviews here and on TripAdvisor, that will give you an idea.

  8. I have often seen the Angleterre for cheap prices, both directly like in this example and as a "top secret" selection on lastminute.co.uk, which is another site worth checking.

    As for the coin-operated laundry, there seem to be many instances in Europe where the hotel does not actually have that amenity, even though HOTWIRE posts it. I'm not sure if there is some sort of cultural misunderstanding or what, but I wouldn't take it seriously.

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